The Dallas Examiner July 27, 2019

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VOL. XXXIII  • JuNE 27, 2019

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City Council briefing on new budgets Historic Business Duo

Reparations Hearing

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By DIANE XAVIER The Dallas Examiner

Dallas’ new mayor, Eric Johnson, and the Dallas City Council heard a briefing on the Fiscal Year 20192020 and Fiscal Year 2020-2021 budget overview presented by Chief Financial Officer Elizabeth Reich and the Office of Budget during the council meeting on June 18. It was the first briefing for the new council year. City Manager T.C. Broadnax recommened presenting a balanced biennial budget to the City Council on Aug. 13. Although the general fund for the Fiscal Year 2020 planned year was balanced when presented, a City Council amendment to increase police and fire pay resulted in a structural imbalance

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of $5.3 million. Also, that gap is forecasted to increase to $33.7 million in FY21, $36.6 million in FY22 and up to $44 million in FY23, due also to recent state legislation passed. The topics the City Council will give priority to in upcoming budget talks in the next two months include housing and affordable and mixed-income housing development programs to improve the city’s housing stock, parks and recreation and youth activities, and grocery store strategy to eliminate food deserts in Southern Dallas. Recent surveys the city conducted also show that residents’ top priorities for the budget are infrastructure maintenance, police services and code enforcement. “The purpose of the biennial

Mayor Eric Johnson leads his first Dallas City Council meeting. – The Dallas Examiner screenshot from city of Dallas video.

budget is to ensure sustainability,” Reich said. “We want to make sure those things we are recommending to you are sustainable in the next year and we don’t want you to make a decision to fund a program or initiative if we know that we are not going to be able to afford it in the next year.” Reich presented factors that may

affect the general revenue fund, one of which is the 65/Older or Disabled Property Tax Exemption. The property tax exemptions reduce a property owner’s liability but also reduce revenues that come to the city to support services. On June 12, the City Council voted to approve an increase in this exemption from $90,000 to $100,000, which resulted in a projected revenue loss of $3.4 million for the city. “The budget development for FY20 and future years must consider two significant factors affecting the general fund revenues, and that is the economic condition and state legislation,” Reich said. “The two largest revenues that will be impacted are the property taxes and sales tax.” For FY19, the City Council

adopted a $3.6 billion budget. “We are starting on a little bit of a deficit because although we presented a balanced budget last year through the City Council amendment process, the City Council made the decision to fund additional public safety spending to raise the starting salaries to $60,000 and provide a 3% raise for all others,” Reich said. “That took the budget out of balance for the current year, so our budget for FY20 that we are starting out with this year is there is a gap of $5.3 million.” Another area that will affect the general fund is recent legislation passed by the Texas Legislature such as SB2, known as the Texas Property Tax Reform and

Arlington elects first Black councilwoman

See City Budget Page 3

BY MATHEW SHAW The Dallas Examiner

R&B artist uses music as mechanism for hope Darcell Crayton – Photos courtesy of Crayton Entertainment & Darcell’s Facebook

By MIKE MCGEE The Dallas Examiner

Darcell is the image, the creative, the record label founder. Darcell Crayton is the man, the father, the hometown hero who provides the musical message. Together as one, the performer believes that a musical future was always his destiny. “I come from a family of a few singers,” he said, recalling his first time singing in church at five years old, as well as growing up being influenced by artists he described as the Michael Jacksons of the world. His sound might be characterized as soulful, or pop-infused R&B, but Darcell is less fixated on the sound and more about its purpose, calling it “... a mechanism for hope. My music’s feel-good music.” With his self-titled debut album available on multiple online music platforms, the performer, who called himself “a little old country boy” at one point, is pleased to note that he got his creative start in Dallas County. “I was performing at Starz,” the artist said as he thought back to some of the first clubs where he made his musical mark. “RJ’s by the Lake, right at Bachman Lake.” He pointed out that both venues had, in effect, “a revolving door” where he made repeated appear-

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ances on their respective stages. Beyond Dallas, a performance at the Apollo Theater in Harlem especially stands out for Darcell, yet he described winning a Tom Joyner K104 talent show back home as the “pivotal moment” when he knew he was an established professional singer/songwriter. “Primarily because at the time all the crème de la crème of the city, so to speak, we were all vying for first place,” he remembered. “And to be in that ambiance of so many gifted people – you know, there’s so much talent out here in Dallas – and then to actually win, for them to actually call my name … at the end of the night, it really validated for me that, you know what? I can touch people. People do enjoy what I do. And who knows, maybe I can make a living out of it.” That contest ended with a $10,000 grand prize and opened up new opportunities for the talent. But just as Darcell has enjoyed his journey upward, turbulence accompanied his ascension. He confessed that a move to Los Angeles led to the most trying time in his professional life. “Now you’re in a place where everybody that thinks they’re that guy, that girl, they come to Los Angeles. So now you’re in the ambiance where some of the finest talent, not only in your city, but

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some of the finest talent in the country, they come, they pitch their tent and now they’re in L.A.” He had with him his guitar and keyboard but knew no one. He found chances to sing and act, but often times also had to live out of his car for prolonged periods. “Taking a shower at the fitness center. Before that, waking up, going to the service station to brush my teeth and use the restroom,” he asserted. “Then, working out and ironing my clothes, and then some nights sleeping in my car. Some nights trying to sleep in a storage unit hoping the owners didn’t find out.” Throughout all these difficulties, Darcell never considered quitting and going back home. “My life changed when I realized, wait a minute, if God will put you in a place to be seen and be heard, all the residual effect is that you receive money, fame and success, then that’s an empty career,” he added. “I want to be in a position where that 17year-old Black kid in South Dallas, or another little White girl in Highland Park says, ‘Hey, he came from Dallas. If he did it, maybe I can too.’” Darcell concluded that he needed to become a source of inspiration

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214-941-3100

After decades of service to her community, Dr. Barbara Odom-Wesley said she was ready to face the next chapter in her life: being the first Black woman to serve on the Arlington City Council. Though she expressed feeling both humbled and proud, she said she also wondered why it took so long for Arlington to elect a Black woman to the City Council. “We’re in 2019. Why hasn’t there already been a Black female on the Arlington City Council?” she pondered. “But at least we’re here now, right? I’m opening doors for whoever’s going to come behind me, so I take it as quite a responsibility.” The daughter of Elzie Odom, Arlington’s first Black mayor from 1997 to 2003, Odom-Wesley led a lifetime of public service inspired by her parents. “He and my mother taught me that service is the price you pay for the space you occupy,” she said. “God didn’t bless you just so you could be happy. He blessed you so you could make other people not happy but blessed, so you could bless others. I’ve taken that responsibility seriously my whole life.” Arlington has been her home for almost 40 years, and during that time she has taught and worked in health care administration and served on numerous boards and committees, such as a charter member for the Martin Luther King Celebration Committee and on the board of trustees for Texas Health Arlington Memorial Hospital. “I’ve always had a vision for service,” she stated. “I was president of this and secretary of that, starting with the Campfire Girls and National Honor Society. I was always an officer, always in a leadership position, and I felt like that was Legacy of Service awards $20,000 in scholarships Education Pg 3

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Dr. Barbara Odom-Wesley – Official photo

a responsibility.” She won the District 8 seat last month by 62%, defeating three other candidates. Odom-Wesley first ran last year to replace Councilman Charlie Parker after he retired from his District 1 seat. “It’s also the first seat my dad held, so I decided I can step up and serve at that level,” she recalled. Though she lost that race by about 350 votes, she said she learned a lot. She decided she would not run again because she assumed the incumbent would occupy the seat for the next six years. However, Arlington voters approved term limits later that year, which opened a seat in District 8. “If [the incumbent] had been running in this seat, I would not have run,” she said. “The Lord parted the waters, and then really just kind of pushed me through it and made this happen.” As a council member, she said she wanted to work with allies and former adversaries to bring workable solutions for the issues facing the growing city of almost 400,000, from its lack of public transportation to the controversy around short-term rentals. “I’m not a politician. I don’t accept that label,” she declared. “I am a public servant, and so I’m here to help people, and as I said all through my campaign and at every opportunity, I want to be their voice. I want to be the voice for the citizens of Arlington, and since I was elected at an at-large position, that’s everybody in Arlington.”

Inside

State/Metro . . . . . . 2 Education. . . . . . . . 3 Editorial . . . . . . . . . 4 Perspectives . . . . . 5 Classifieds . . . . . . . 7 Calendar. . . . . . . . . 8

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The Dallas Examiner July 27, 2019 by The Dallas Examiner - Issuu